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    ade compact manual

    To Change User Codes Press Prog then enter your user 1 code, Press 8 to change user 1 code or 7 to change user 2 code, then enter your new 4-digit code. Press Reset to return to day mode. Keypad PA Keys 4 and 9 on the control panel and remote keypad are PA. If these keys are depressed together.I have a ADE Optima Compact as in picture supplied. I do not want to start pressing buttons I think correspond and causing a problem I then do not know how to get out of with a siren blaring or my code no longer working. I am logged in as myself. Do you know how to resolve this.I need the correct user instructions for it, is all. Thanks for your efforts.Thanks for your efforts.I have the exact same ADE Optima ? ? Compact ? alarm, same panel. I have the 4-digit code but no real idea what I'm doing. The only information I could find is this link - Thanks in advancePaste as plain text instead Display as a link instead Clear editor Upload or insert images from URL. Power Usage Notes Adding peripherals may increase the loading on the power supply to your board and this, in turn, may affect the voltage presented to the Raspberry Pi. If the Raspberry Pi's supply voltage falls below a certain value (anecdotally stated as around 4.75 V), or it begins to fluctuate, your setup may become unstable. There is a Wiki section about this issue which is worth a read. Model B Hardware Revisions and USB Power limitsHardware Revision 1.0 The original Model B board had current limiting polyfuses which limited the power output of each USB port to approximatly 100 mA. USB devices using more than 100 mA had to be connected via a powered hub. The Raspberry Pi's PSU was chosen with a power budget of 700 mA of which 200 mA were assigned to the USB ports, so the Raspberry Pi's (poly)fuses were designed only for devices up to 100 mA, and typical 140 mA polyfuses will have as much as 0.6 volt across them when drawing currents near the 100 mA limit.

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    I have looked everywhere on the internet and Honeywell's site with no luck. I have attached picture.But the g3 user manual is the sameI will look at the g2 download when I am allowed to.I will look at the g2 download when I am allowed to.Enter the four digit user code. The system will start to Set Program 1. If another Program is not selected, Program will arm according to its exit mode. To Set a Program From the Day mode, enter a four digit user code. The system will start to Set Program 1. Press Prog followed by the Program number to be Set. A series of beeps will be produced acknowledging the Program number and the Program will start to Set according to its exit mode. Faults During Setting Faults are shown by the zone indicators, accompanied by a broken beep tone, one beep for zone I, two beeps for zone 2 etc. All exit timers have their timer periods halted whilst zones are in fault. To Omit Zones Enter a 4 digit user code and if required, select Program 2 or 3. Press Omit, the exit tone will stop and the zones that are about to be armed will be displayed. Key in the zone number(s) to be omitted which will flash to confirm selection. (Zones which have been programmed as omit prevent will give a reject tone). When the selection is complete press Set and the exit tone will continue. To Quick Set Pressing Set during the exit period will cause the exit tone to stop and the system to Set within about 5 seconds. To Unset the System Enter the user code and the system will return to Day mode. If the alarm has been activated then entering the code will stop the alarm and the cause of the alarm will be displayed, Press Reset to clear the indication and return to Day mode. Codes The user 1 and user 2 codes are 4 digit and can be set to any number from 0000 to 9999. They have the same operation for testing, Setting and Unsetting.

    Also works while powering the Raspberry Pi. Staples (Business Depot) (Bureau EN GROS) Staples 4-port hub Item 607477-CA StarTech.com StarTech.com 7-port Compact USB 2.0 Hub (ST7202USB). Comes with 5 V 2 A supply. Shows in lsusb as two Genesys Logic, Inc. USB-2.0 4-Port HUBs (05e3:0608). Using an 2500 mA Voltcraft CN-060 4 Port USB 2.0 Hub powered with AC Adapter (1 A). Powering Raspberry Pi via microUSB from a hub port. CN-061 7 Port USB 2.0 Hub powered with AC Adapter. There is a voltage problem on the left half of the hub (4 ports) that do not deliver enough current to feed a wifi dongle (tested with an RTL8191S). Using a 5 V 2 A power supply, which isn't supplied with the hub, it is able to power the Raspberry Pi as well. Belkin 7-Port Powered Mobile Hub - device labelled F4U018, packaging labelled F5U701.F5U307 Hi-Speed USB 2.0 7-Port Hub (Powered, able to apply power to Raspberry Pi via micro USB from this hub at same time) It work's sometimes. (Works always without powering the Raspberry Pi, haven't tried that) Dell Dell U2410 Monitor Built-in 4 Port Hub - Shows up as a pair with 0424:2514 and 0424:2640. It did work for a keyboard and webcam. Bluetooth that works connected directly to the Raspberry Pi triggers the error. DELTACO 7-Port USB Hub UH-713 Rev 3. This one consists also of two 05e3:0608 Genesys Logic, Inc. USB-2.0 4-Port HUBs connected together. The power supply is rated at 5 V 2 A. It kills Ethernet when X11 is started. Dynex 7-Port USB Hub - Does not work in Debian 19-04 image. DX-HB7PT 7-Port USB Hub - As per the Gear Head below, it's 2 daisy-chained Genesys Logic 05e3:0608 devices. Appears to result in significant slow downs when the USB is under load, such as running the root filesystem from a USB drive. Dynamode 7-Port USB 2.0 Hub (Silver and black). Feeds power back up the interconnect to the Raspberry Pi causing the power LED to light on the Raspberry Pi if the hub is powered on, but the Raspberry Pi is not.

    Users should still ensure their power supply can power the Raspberry Pi and the USB peripherals. Revision 2.0 was released in August 2012. Linux Driver Issues Shortly after the Raspberry Pi was released it was confirmed that there were a number of issues with the Linux USB driver for the SMSC95xx chip. Powered USB Hubs A number of low-cost powered USB hubs are known to have caused problems. Members of the Raspberry Pi forums have reported low power or no power at all in some cases. The following is a list of specific Powered USB Hubs which appear to be fault-free. Please note that these do not take into account powering the Raspberry Pi from the hub, in addition to its peripherals. If you use a powered hub and the Raspberry Pi PSU together consider powering them from the same power bar with switch, so you can turn them on simultaneously.Tested on my Raspberry Pi. It's able to power the Raspberry Pi, external HDD and other peripherals. Whilst it may be powered externally, it does take power from both connected computers. If one of them is, say, a netbook or laptop, that may provide sufficient extra power to enable the use of USB devices that the Pi alone cannot handle. If you don't do both, boot-loops are likely to occur. Unlike my last hub, will power Wi-Fi. LogiLink UA0085 USB 2.0 Hub, 4-Port with PSU 5 V, 2 A UA0091 USB 3.0 Hub, 4-Port with PSU 5 V, 4 A. Connected with USB2.0 cable. 1 A per port, able to support USB HDD drives and other power hungry devices. There are US and UK power supply versions and it can be ordered in US and (for the UK version) many countries in Europe. Pluscom Pluscom 7 Port USB 2.0 Hub Model U7PH-3A with 3 A PSU. USB ID 1a40:0101. Powering Raspberry Pi via microUSB from a hub port. Internally two 4 Port switches linked. Leaks power back up USB data cable to Raspberry Pi, but it is not really a problem when powering Raspberry Pi at the same time. Satechi ST-UH12P 12 port powered hub with 2 Control Switches.

    Happened whether or not the hub's independent power supply was connected to the hub.) Soniq 4-Port 5 V supply. Model number CUH100. (B). Appears to draw power away from the Raspberry Pi, even when the Raspberry Pi has an isolated power line. Netgear WNA1100 Wi-Fi Adapter (which is known to work in other setups is recognized, but it is unresponsive). Targus ACH115EU 7-port powered hub. 5 V 3 A power supply. Arduino communicates with Raspberry Pi when connected directly to Raspberry Pi's USB port, but it hangs as soon as if connected via ACH115. Also sometimes smsc95xx eth0 Failed to read register index 0x00000114 etc.SliZe 7 port USB 2.0 Hub (powered) - Item number 17080 (Barcode 8 713439 170801). Prevents Ethernet from being recognised. Keyboard sends multiple characters. Measurements by TrevorGowen (talk ) of the power loading behaviour of an example of this type of hub and its supplied PSU are logged at CPM-Spectre-Pi. PoweredUSBHubs. together with similar measurements of other devices. High speed devices such as hard drives had failures. USB Remotes ATI Remote Wonder (X10 Wireless Technology, Inc.Have not verified multi-touch features.PKB 1800 Wireless Smart Pad ad Mini Keyboard. The pad works as a mouse, but not multi touch features. The keyboard works. Riitek RT-MWK01 Rii Wireless 2.4 GHz Keyboard-mouse Combo, also known as Digicom WKEYPE01. Please be aware that some of these keyboards were probably used with a powered hub Working USB Keyboards The following is a list of specific keyboards known to work and which appear to work fault-free. A4 Tech Model KL-5 USB Keyboard, 20 mA. Model AKB-410UB. Keyboard with Touchpad. Apple (Apple keyboards that have USB ports require an external powered hub to work, and do not work on the Raspberry Pi directly. Rated 100 mA. Works directly in Raspberry Pi) Compaq Compaq Internet Keyboard KU-9978 (049f:000e). Rated 5 V 100 mA.

    The Raspberry Pi also fails to boot when powered off this hub, with or without the interconnect plugged in. Stops the network from working when connected to the Raspberry Pi after booting the Raspberry Pi - cannot ssh to the Raspberry Pi. Best avoided.:-( Shows up in lsusb as a pair of ID 05e3:0608 Genesys Logic, Inc. USB-2.0 4-Port HUB which is interesting. - Confirmed. This hub also appears unable to power an external USB drive using a y-cable as it gives the error -71 message in dmesg (when providing external power to the Raspberry Pi). 4-Port High-Speed USB 2.0 Hub (USB-H40-A2.0), came with with a 1 A power supply. Leaks power to the Raspberry Pi through the uplink. Doesn't work with Raspberry Pi, unless the Raspberry Pi is powered by a second power source. This hub is completely generic and I've seen it being sold under different brand names as well. Therefore, a picture is included for easy identification. Gear Head UH7250MAC 7-port powered hub. Internally, two daisy-chained Genesys Logic 05e3:0608 devices. Causes Ethernet instability when used under very specific circumstances, in X11. UH5200T 4-port powered hub. As of 2012-08-16 Wheezy, if any USB 1.x device (a keyboard, for example) is plugged into this hub, Ethernet stops, and USB interrupts for other devices get dropped (keys repeating forever), etc. Occurs even if power is not attached (not a power leakage problem). Also, turned out to be somewhat more specific to the combination of two particular low-speed devices. It doesn't boot when hub connected to Raspberry Pi. The funniest thing is that Raspberry Pi powers on when I plug in this hub to normal size USB port (not that small dedicated port).Listed in lsusb as Genesys Logic. Fails to deliver enough power to connected devices even when using AC power suply. Inland 4-Port USB 2.0 Cable Hub model no 480426 (Some devices work, some don't, cheap unshielded untwisted wire design) Logik LP7HUB11 7-Port USB Hub. (Ethernet failed, slow response, in LXDE.

    (B) SIIG Wireless Ultra Slim Multimedia Mini Keyboard JK-WR0612-S1 - Unresponsive and sticky keys. Texet MB-768B standard keyboard (Rated 5 V 1.5 A (!), so probably too much power drain. Kernel panic, Debian6-19-04-2012) Trust TRUST GXT 18 Gaming Keyboard - No power to keyboard, could be a driver issue - no error messages. Unbranded Compuparts model no. Works fb on model B with Raspbian Wheezy Microsoft Comfort Curve Mouse 3000 for Business Comfort Mouse 6000 (works when directly connected to Raspberry Pi (B). Does not work when connected through USB Hub (mouse pointer intermittent). Does not require any special drivers. Haven't confirmed if charging the mouse requires a powered USB hub or not. Logik Logik IMF Blue Trace Wired USB mouse (Model LMWBLU11) - disconnects from the USB port every 20 seconds when using the Raspian distro. Always reconnects to the USB port successfully (B) Logitech Logitech G400 Gaming Mouse - 100% CPU load and laggy mouse cursor when the mouse is moved. MX518 works fine on the same setup, so I suspect it's a polling rate issue.Microsoft Microsoft Touch Mouse - Does not see right clicks, Only left. Razer Naga Wired USB mouse - the mouse seems to present itself as a keyboard because the numpad on the left-hand side of the device works, but the cursor doesn't move.Working USB Wi-Fi Adapters These adapters are known to work on the Raspberry Pi. This list is not exhaustive, other adapters may well work, but it has not yet been tried. Note: A Wi-Fi adapter will probably need more power than the Raspberry Pi USB port can provide, especially if there is a large distance from the Wi-Fi adapter to the Wi-Fi Access Point. Shows up as a Ralink RT5370 device, and no drivers or additional software s required. Created wpa.conf, edited 'interfaces' file and restarted the networking. Alfa AWUS036NEH: Tested on Debian Squeeze (with Ralink firmware package) AWUS036NH: Tested on Arch Linux ARM using the rt2800usb module.

    AWUS036NH: Tested on Debian Wheezy (with Ralink firmware package). Tested on Raspbian too (drivers from aircrackng). AWUS036H (500 mW version): Tested on Raspbian (drivers from aircrack-ng). AWUS036H (1 W version): Tested on Raspbian (drivers from aircrack-ng). AWUS036NHA: Tested on Raspbian (drivers from aircrack-ng). Works fine if connected after boot, otherwise Raspberry Pi won't boot up. AirLink101 AWLL5088: Tested on Debian Wheezy. This adapter is based on the OEM Edimax EW-7811Un. For automatic installation, See MrEngmanns script listed below under the Edimax device. USB-N13 USB ID 0b05:17ab, works with Adafruit Occidentalis v0.1 image as it includes kernel with 8192u driver built-in (B) WL-167G v1 USB ID 0b05:1706, Ralink RT2571 working out-of-the-box on Debian image from 2012-04-19. Requires powered hub, otherwise it is detected by OS, but it will not function. Does not require powered hub. Works without a powered HUB. Tested on OpenELEC (works OOB), RaspBMC (works OOB), XBian (works OOB) and 2012-08-08 Raspbian Wheezy (works OOB). Distributed in Australia by Buy Raspberry Pi Australia. On Debian requires the firmware-ralink package from the non-free repository. Tested on OpenELEC (works OOB), RaspBMC (works OOB), Raspian - 2012-07-15-Wheezy-raspbian (followed instructions here ) Powered hub required. Works on RaspBMC OOB (with NetworkManager plugin). Tested under Arch using this guide. Tested with Raspbian - See installation instructions - Powered hub not required. Tested and working on Rasbian Wheezy WITHOUT powered hub. Works out of the box in Raspbian. Causes reboot when plugging on a live Rev. 2 Raspberry Pi Conrad WLAN Stick N150 mini. Works out of the box in OpenELEC, requires firmware - Realtek and r8712u kernel module on Debian. Requires a powered USB hub. See Micronet SP907NS for installation instructions and script.

    Works directly connected to Raspberry Pi Das Keyboard Model S Professional Keyboard (Built in USB hub not tested) (B) Model S Ultimate Keyboard (Built in USB hub working) (B) Dell SK-8115 (B) (Rated 100 mA. K520 Keyboard (B) K700 Wireless Keyboard with Touchpad and unifying receiver K750 Wireless Solar Keyboard (B) (Mac version works too. (B) ) LX 710 - works fine with receiver plugged directly into the Raspberry Pi (accompanying mouse works fine too). OK direct into Model B Raspberry Pi. G19 Gaming Keyboard, works fine with no external power. Illumination with external power. Powered hum in back of keyboard works too. G15 Gaming keyboard, as long as you press the backlight button twice to turn off the backlight (it says below it dosen't work with backlight on. Seems to work fine, even without a hub. ONN Keyboard Stock No: ONA11HO087 (from Walmart). Combination keyboard and mouse package with nano receiver. Be sure to configure keyboard layout. Ortek Ortek Technology, Inc. WKB-2000S Wireless Keyboard with Touchpad works fine on Raspbian Wheezy and Raspbmc. Wireless USB receiver (device ID 05a4:2000) is recognised automatically. Connected directly to Raspberry Pi USB port, no powered hub used. Does suffer from dropouts and glitches though. These can be cured by pulling out and reinserting the dongle in the USB socket. The keyboard sometimes hangs after power on when used with my laptop - it seems to need 30 seconds of non-use before it works fine. Again, remove and insert the dongle cures it. Works fine vi my Benq monitor's USB Hub. RT-MWK01 mini wireless 2.4 GHz Keyboard-mouse Combo, also known as Digicom WKEYPE01.Keyboard and mouse set. (B) SIIG SIIG Wireless Multi-Touchpad Mini Keyboard 02-1286A v1.0 (B) Silvercrest MTS2219 Wireless Keyboard and mouse set. Powered hub NOT used. (B) SolidTek Solid Tek KB-P3100BU ASK-3100U. Sony Keyboard for PlayStation 2 (PS2) Linux.

    Works without powered hub with 5 V 1 A supply, requires manual keyboard remapping with Debian Squeeze to USA 101-key layout. A4 Tech Model GL-6 USB Keyboard, 20 mA. Even on a powered hub. No problems on other computers I have tested it with. Accuratus Accuratus KYBAC100-101USBBLK causes kernel panic (rated 100 mA). Tested with 1000 mA cheap unbranded and Nokia 1200 mA power adaptors. Apple Apple Keyboard (109 keys) A1048. Draws too much power and does not seem to work properly when plugged into a powered hub. Once failed it needs reconnecting before another attempt. (B) G15 Gaming Keyboard - LCD and key backlights flicker, 95% unresponsive to typing. I don't know of a way to turn the illumination off. (B) K360 Wireless Keyboard - Occasional sticky keys. (B) K400 wireless keyboard with touchpad (completely non-functional on debian6-19-04-2012) G510 Gaming Keyboard - lagging or unresponsive keys. MX5500 wireless keyboard and mouse with USB Bluetooth reciever - Unstable, looses connection without prior notice EX100 Cordless Desktop, wireless keyboard and mouse. Mouse and keyboard hangs every few minutes (with or without hub). Microsoft Wireless Desktop 800 - Keyboard has 'sticky' keys. (B) Wireless Entertainment Keyboard - No key input recognized (possibly connectivity issue as pairing devices does not seem to work) Wireless Optical Desktop 1000 - Keyboard has 'sticky' keys (B) Wireless Keyboard 2000 - Keyboard has 'sticky' keys. (B) Wireless Desktop 3000 - Keyboard has 'sticky' keys. Me too, but it caused a kernel panic -- tested on powered hub and direct. Razer Razer Tarantula gaming keyboard - sticky keys, could be power issue as is programmable with host powered USB hub and audio jacks. Razer BlackWidow - Sticky keys, could be a power related issue due to illuminated logo (Blue LED). Razer Arctosa - Sticky keys, most probably power related issue since it states it's rated at 5 V 500 mA.

    Works out of the box, but it requires a powered hub (the Raspberry Pi boots with this dongle plugged in, recognizes and configures it, works for some time, but then it crashes randomly under heavy traffic. A powered hub seems to fix the issue). D-Link AirPlus G DWL-G122 (rev. E). USB ID 07d1:3c0f, Ralink RT2870. On Debian requires the firmware-ralink package from the Squeeze-firmware non-free repository. (However I experience total crashes on Raspbian 2012-07-15 after a few minutes of load on the WLAN. Will have to investigate via serial console.) AirPlus G DWL-G122 (rev. C). USB ID 07d1:3c03, Ralink RT2571. Working out-of-the-box on Arch image from 2012-0429. AirPlus G DWL-G122 (rev. B1). USB ID 2001:3c00, Ralink RT2571. Working out-of-the-box on Arch image from 2012-0613. DWA-110 (Version A1). Requires the ralink package from the non-free repository on Debian. DWA-121 (Version A1). Wireless N 150 Pico. Works out-of-the-box with Raspian Wheezy (2012-09-18) and Raspbmc (2012-11-06) using Network-Manager addon (see Program - Addons) DWA-123 (Version A1). USB ID 2001:3c17, Ralink RT2800. Verified with direct USB: no powered USB hub needed. Also verified when Nano used in powered USB hub. Install it using command-line: apt-get install wicd. Once configured ith wicd to auto-run on boot, no need to turn back to LXDE. Recommended. DWA-140 (Version B1). USB ID 07d1:3c09, Ralink RT2870. On Debian requires the firmware-ralink package from the Squeeze-firmware non-free repository. DWA-140 (Version B2). USB ID 07d1:3c0a, Ralink RT3072. USB ID 07d1:3c11, Ralink RT2870. DWA-160 (Version A2). Works with Raspbian Wheezy after installing the firmware-ralink package from the non-free repository on Debian. Edimax EW-7811Un USB ID 7392:7811, RTL8192CU, driver blob via Element14.The EW-7811Un can be powered directly from the Raspberry Pi if the Raspberry Pi is powered using a well regulated power supply.

    A script-based installation for the EW-7811Un by MrEngman can be found on the Raspberry Pi forums. Tested with Debian Squeeze and Raspbian. An installation guide can be found here. Instructions for getting the EW-7811Un working in Raspbmc (tested RC3) can be found here. RT2573 chipset. Works with powered usb-hub or shorted polyfuses. EW-7711UAn. Ralink RT2870, works perfectly on Arch with a powered hub (not tested without yet). RT5370 Wireless Adapter. Use method shown here for Debian.Requires powered USB hub for adequate power. When directly powered by Raspberry Pi, it fails after a few minutes. (B) Unusable with analog audio because when data is being send or recieved the audio get disorted. Use script from here for Wheezy. Eminent EM4575 - rt2800usb driver. EnGenius EUB9603 EXT - Realtek r8712u driver Gigabyte Gigabyte GN-WB32L 802.11n USB WLAN Card. Works with the rt2800usb driver. GMYLE Wireless 11n USB Adapter. Uses RTL8188CUS chipset - cheap on eBay. No need to firmware when using Debian Wheezy (B) Linksys Linksys (Cisco) WUSB100 ver.2 1737:0078, tested on Raspbian; follow Brucalipto.org instructions; not stress tested, but it works without issues for light network load. Micronet Micronet SP907NS, 11N Wireless LAN USB Adapter (uses Realtek RTL8188CUS) works plugged directly into Raspberry Pi USB (B) Debian installation instructions IMPORTANT: read the instructions first to avoid problems, and Auto-install script. The script has been used to install other adapters using the RTL8188CUS chip. Updated driver that handles the latest rpi-updates that kill the original driver, for manual installation, automatically installed by the Auto-install script. MSI 0db0:6861 MSI-6861 802.11g Wi-Fi adapter (US54G): works with external powered USB hub, requires firmware from here. Netgear N150: Reported as WNA1100 device, uses the Atheros ar9271 chipset. On Debian, requires the firmware-atheros package from the Squeeze-backports non-free repository (!

    ) N150: Some versions reported as Realtek RTL8188CUS device. Read Micronet entry above and use RTL8188CUS script for installation. Works best plugged into powered USB hub. WG111v1: Prism54 chipset. Needs powered hub. Follow info for Prism54 chipset on Debian wiki. WG111v2: Realtek rtl8187 chipset. Seems to draw a lot of power; e.g. I can't power this and a USB thumb drive simultaneously. WNA1000M works with Raspberry Pi Model B Board v. BS1233.However when ing torrents, when torrent pick up speed system become unresponsive. OvisLink Evo-W300USB: USB ID 148f:2270 Ralink Technology RT2770.Works only through powered USB hub. PCBOWAU2-N Wireless 11N USB adapter (uses Realtek RTL8191SU chip) Installed using r8712u Kernel module Ralink inner 02 joggler Wi-Fi USB RT2770F USB-ID 148f:2770 (firmware-ralink required) (only got dhcp on powered hub) RT2070 USB-ID 148f:2070 firmware is already loaded into Raspbian. For Debian, the firmware must be installed (instructions ). Needs a powered USB hub. RT3070 USB-ID 148f:3070 firmware is already loaded into Raspbian. An image of an adapter with this chip can be found here. Powered USB hub required. Tested in Raspbian, used wicd to configure network settings. Powered USB hub Required. Tested in Raspbmc. Needs package firmware - Realtek and used wicd-curses to configure. USB hub required. RNX-MiniN1 (RWLD-110001) Wireless-N 2.0 Dongle (Realtek Semiconductor Corp. RTL8188CUS 802.11n WLAN Adapter) Tested in Raspbian, powered from USB hub. Module is shipped in Raspbian image. Module available in shipped Raspbian image. Runs without powered Hub when plugged into running Raspberry Pi, but the Raspberry Pi won't boot while the stick is plugged in.

    This chipset is also compatible with hostapd (wireless AP software) TL-WN823N Works out of box on Raspian using powered USB Hub Trendnet TEW-648UBM USB ID: 20f4:648b, works OOTB with Adafruit Occidentials Raspbian Wheezy variant as it includes kernel with RTL8188CUS driver built-in (B) Widemac RT5370 Wireless Adapter from Ebay runs without powered hub. Follow these instructions. ZyAIR G-202 802.11bg using zd1211rw kernel module and zd1211-firmware package Problem USB Wi-Fi Adapters These adapters were tested and found to have issues the Raspberry Pi. Alfa AWUS036NHA (Vendor ID: 0cf3, Product ID: 9271) - Tested with Raspbian. Works fine if connected after boot. Kills boot process if previously attached. Details here. EDIMAX EW-7811Un (Vendor ID: 7397, Product ID: 7811) - Reports as containing the Realtek RTL8188CUS chipset listed below, no lockup or kernal oops under Wheezy, but dmesg reports constant timeouts trying to initialize the module. This appears to be resolved on 2012-09-18-Wheezy-raspbian and newer versions. Linksys WUSB300N (Vendor ID: 13B1, Product ID: 0029) - Tested with Raspbian, OpenELEC, among others. No Linux chipset support for Marvell 88W8362 at all. LogiLink WL0085 tested under Debian (Squeeze, Wheezy, Raspbian); no stable connection can be established. This gets even worse when X is running. MicroNEXT MN-WD152B (Debian image) modprobe hangs when plugged in, lsusb hangs. Tested both on builtin USB and on powered USB hub. There are other RiiTek Bluetooth (and non-Bluetooth wireless) devices on the working list. D-Link DBT-122, with ID 07d1:f101, using a Broadcom chip IOGear GBU321 (Broadcom BCM2045 Chipset) Works with Raspbian Wheezy directly attached to Raspberry Pi and via powered USB hub. Trust BT-2400p Working well with Raspbian Wheezy directly attached to Raspberry Pi. Using with sma-Bluetooth (SMA Solar Inverter reading software). Problem Bluetooth adapters Belkin Belkin F8T017.

    Tested with Raspbian 2012-07-15 and bluez installed with apt-get. When dongle is inserted into Pluscom powered USB hub, my remote PuTTY session scrolls incredibly slowly (testing with ls -R to generate text). Suspect network issue. Lots of errors on dmesg too. Raspberry Pi itself is responsive when using directly. On removal of the device everything goes back to normal.The device id is 1131:1004 Integrated System Solution Corp. Bluetooth Device. Asus USB-BT211 Shows up as HCI device in Raspbian, but it does not scan or pair. USB Ethernet adapters Working Ethernet adapters AVM FRITZ!Box WLAN 3030 USB Ethernet Adapter: Works out of the box. No external power source needed. Wintech USB 2.0 LanCard Model: LAU-15 (CK0049C) using the mcs7830 driver. Tested only on powered USB hub so far. Works out of the box on Raspbian, haven't tested on any other OS. Edimax Edimax EU-4230 USB2.0 Fast Ethernet Adapter with 3 port USB hub. Works out of the box. Needs its own power source. D-Link D-Link DUB-E100 Fast Ethernet USB 2.0 Adapter - works out of the box, requires own power supply (from powered USB hub) Sitecom Sitecom LN-030 V2 detected as ASIX AX88772 USB 2.0 Ethernet Adapter works out of the box. Doesn't seem to require any extra power supply. A-Link A-Link NA1GU Gigabit USB 2.0 Ethernet adapter This adapter works, but it (probably) requires a bit of work. With that driver the device is detected, but it does not seem to be possible to actually put any traffic through it.:-( In order to make it work you need to the latest driver from the chipset manufacturer. Fortunately this is GNU GPLv2 -licenced source code and not a binary blob, so compiling it for the Raspberry Pi is perfectly doable. Reboot and you should have a fully working Ethernet adapter. The adapter seems to work without a powered USB hub, but according to the specifications it can draw up to 190 mA, so there might be stability issues if additional power is not provided. No external power source or USB hub needed.


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